Glenn Beck and Tucker Carlson consider whether American decline is by design and a prelude to authoritarian rule



Tucker Carlson revealed in a spirited conversation Tuesday with nationally syndicated radio host and co-founder of Blaze Media Glenn Beck that his tour of foreign nations has little to do with those destinations and everything to do with the United States — a nation he would like see restored to greatness or at the very least boosted back to the domestic and international prowess it apparently enjoyed circa 1993.

During his first interview in the U.S. since his return from Russia, the titular head of the Tucker Carlson Network broached various topics with Beck, nearly all linked back to the health and integrity of the United States.

Before the duo delved too deeply into matters directly affecting the U.S., Beck pressed Carlson on recent critiques over his Russian reportage, for which critics have pulled the Cold War term "useful idiot" out of retirement; forced parallels to the Soviet propaganda peddled by the New York Times' Pulitzer-winning Walter Duranty; made accusations of economic illiteracy; and, in the case of Bill Kristol, demanded Carlson's exile.

Carlson recently interviewed Russian President Vladimir Putin, then joined Muscovites in traversing the Soviet-constructed Moscow Metro system, wherein he marveled at the Russian capital's apparently clean and orderly underground.

Carlson also visited a grocery store in hopes of ascertaining firsthand whether sanctions on the Slavic nation have had an impact on citizens' shopping experience.

"Coming to a Russian grocery store, the 'heart of evil,' and seeing what things cost and how they live — it will radicalize you against our leaders," Carlson said in the video. "That's how I feel, anyway: radicalized. We're not making any of this up, by the way. At all."

Beck told Carlson Tuesday that it would not be hard to replicate such cleanliness and order if one would allow for the kind of totalitarian overreach and bloodletting seen in nations like North Korea; that behind such glimmers of utopia lurk monstrous systems alien to America.

"There's a lot of people on the right and the left that are both saying, 'Screw the Constitution. We need a radicalized leader,'" said Beck. "When you look at Orban, I think Orban is great for his country. That's not our system. ... Moscow might be great. Love to visit. That's not our system," said Beck. "The only path forward for America is through the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, and the Constitution."

Carlson agreed, making expressly clear over the course of the interview that contrary to recent complaints leveled against him, he is neither a flack for Putin nor a fan of strongman authoritarianism. Rather, he suggested that the point of his foreign travels was to shake Americans out their resignation to the very domestic trends steering America off the path Beck mentioned and toward authoritarianism.

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"The people that run our country are destroying it, and they're doing it on purpose," said Carlson. "With what they've done at the border: completely changing the population, letting millions and millions of people who have no connection to the United States, can't possibly help our economy, can't possibly unify our very fractured civic culture ... whose loyalty and knowledge of the United States is completely in question. In fact, their identities are in question."

Carlson indicated that this engineered demographic upheaval is taking place amidst an imported opioid epidemic, costly multilateral initiatives abroad that overstretch the U.S., manufactured race hatred, and lawlessness.

He suggested to Beck that the destruction under way and the disenchantment that follows are altogether a means to break down resistance to a potential statist overcorrection and authoritarian regime.

"We have the laws. They're not being enforced on purpose. ... And of course the reason is because people will lose faith in liberal democracy, and they will welcome a strongman, and that's exactly what this about," said Carlson.

While quick to attribute this program to the left, Carlson also credited the "quisling right on Capitol Hill."

"The communists did it. It's the color revolution. And it's Cloward-Piven," said Beck. "It's happening right in front of our eyes."

According to Carlson, the result and aim of this alleged project is that "people are just going to give up. They're not going to vote, [thinking], 'They're going to steal the elections, just as they stole the last one,' which they did — sorry."

"And they're going to steal the next one, and people are just going to be like, 'You know what? I don't even care. I just totally give up. This is crazy. Just get the bums off my street. Some guy just exposed himself to my daughter, or my nephew just died of a fentanyl OD. Make it stop,'" continued Carlson.

"I don't want that. I want to live in the country we lived in in 1993 or 1985. Not ancient history. Post-Civil Rights Act. We can do that. Let's do it right now," added Carlson.

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Bud Light celebrates transsexual Dylan Mulvaney's '365 Days of Girlhood,' taps him to become March Madness spokesman



Bud Light has partnered with transsexual TikTok personality Dylan Mulvaney to promote its beer for March Madness.

The announcement that the 25-year-old self-promoter would serve as a spokesman for the Anheuser-Busch subsidiary coincided with Mulvaney's revelation Saturday that Bud Light had sent him bespoke packs of beer celebrating his "365 Days of Girlhood."

Mulvaney, whose activism involves "normalizing the bulge" among male transsexuals, recently made headlines after he revealed that Vice President Kamala Harris had written him a letter suggesting that his "journey" toward looking less like a man was courageous.

Harris' comments followed Mulvaney's interview with President Joe Biden in the Oval Office. In the interview, the TikTok personality suggested that Republicans had scapegoated "trans and non-binary people" for "society's downfall," and Biden insinuated that efforts to protect children from genital mutilation were immoral.

In an Instagram post over the weekend, Mulvaney revealed that Bud Light had taken the Biden White House's lead in his aggrandizement.

Mulvaney wrote, "Happy March Madness!! Just found out this had to do with sports and not just saying it's a crazy month. In celebration of this sports things @budlight is giving you the chance to win $15,000! Share a video with #EasyCarryContest for a chance to win! Good luck! #budlightpartner."

The TikTok personality posted another video wherein he brandishes a Bud Light can while taking a bubble bath.

Critics sounded off online upon learning that the announcement of this partnership was not an elaborate April Fool's gag but rather an actual marketing scheme.

Jaimee Michell, founder of Gays Against Groomers, tweeted, "Dylan Mulvaney is the new (botched) face of Bud Light [clown emoji] @budlight either doesn't know their customers or they do and just don't give a sh**. I'm guessing the latter. What a disgrace."

After admitting that the promotion "might genuinely be the weirdest thing" he had ever seen, Spectator contributing editor Stephen Miller suggested that surrealist filmmaker David Lynch "is sitting there going 'what the f*** is this?'"

Townhall columnist Derek Hunter wrote that Bud Light is now "the groomer of beers," a knock on Budweiser's old claim to be "king of beers."

Conservative political commentator Liz Wheeler said that a real woman — one "who birthed 5 kids, homeschools, runs a business, doesn’t sleep much or have time to put on makeup & heels as often as she’d like" — would be more deserving of the custom pack of beer and a partnership than "the man with eyeshadow & plastic surgery who pretends he's a woman."

\u201cHey @budlight, how about you send a beer to the woman who birthed 5 kids, homeschools, runs a business, doesn\u2019t sleep much or have time to put on makeup & heels as often as she\u2019d like?\n\nThat\u2019s a REAL woman. Not the man with eyeshadow & plastic surgery who pretends he\u2019s a woman.\u201d
— Liz Wheeler (@Liz Wheeler) 1680459297

One commenter theorized that the ad, ostensibly damaging to the beer's brand, was "paid for by Coors."

Daily Wire host Michael Knowles took solace in the fact that he was never a Bud Light fan to begin with and that his "personal favorite canned alcohol, White Claw, is already gay enough that it has no need to prove its LGBT bona fides by sponsoring a transvestite."

David Hookstead of OutKick claimed, "We've now reached the point where we can't even drink beer in America without politics being shoved down our throats. Factory workers just want a cold one. Not a woke transgender debate."

Whereas some critics posited that this marketing partnership may ultimately hurt sales, Mythinformed indicated that sales are besides the point: "Bud Light knows hiring Dylan Mulvaney won't help sales — but that's not why they hired him. It will, however, significantly improve their ESG score. That's why they did it."

\u201cBud Light knows hiring Dylan Mulvaney won\u2019t help sales \u2014 but that\u2019s not why they hired him. \n\nIt will, however, significantly improve their ESG score. That\u2019s why they did it. \n\u201d
— Mythinformed (@Mythinformed) 1680487838

Anheuser-Busch, a multi-billion company, made explicit in recent Environmental, Social and Governance reports its intention to "enable a sustainable and inclusive future" and use "the power of our brands to inspire change."

As part of the company's push to boost its ESG score and endear itself to LGBT activists, Anheuser-Busch previously partnered with the National LGBT Chamber of Commerce and GLAAD. These and other such partnerships involved the company helping to bankroll LGBT causes and peddling rainbow aluminum bottles.

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